CHARLESTON, S.C. — South Carolina’s administrator on Friday called for a 21-year-old male who is suspected of murdering 9 people in one of a South’s many ancestral black churches to face a genocide penalty.

“This is a state that is harm by a fact that 9 people innocently were killed,” Gov. Nikki R. Haley said, adding that a state “absolutely will wish him to have a genocide penalty.”

“This is a misfortune hatred that I’ve seen — and that a nation has seen — in a prolonged time,” she said. “We will quarrel this, and we will quarrel this as tough as we can.”

Her comments came hours before Dylann Storm Roof, a white male who returned to Charleston underneath complicated ensure on Thursday night after his detain in North Carolina, was approaching to go before a decider on Friday afternoon for a bond hearing, where he will hear a charges opposite him.

Mr. Roof, who friends pronounced had a new story of expressing extremist opinions, is widely approaching to be prosecuted for murder, an offense that can lift a genocide chastisement in this state. Greg Mullen, a arch of military in Charleston, has called a sharpened a hatred crime, and Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch pronounced a Justice Department was questioning that possibility.

At Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on Calhoun Street, where a sharpened took place, scores of bouquets complacent on a sidewalk, along with wreaths and a facile wooden cross. Gold, china and white balloons were tied to a church’s ironwork; nearby, 9 white ribbons, any temperament a name of a victim, were tied to a fence.

Just after 9 p.m. on Thursday, 24 hours after a gunfire erupted inside a church during Bible study, a lady stood opposite a travel and quickly played a bagpipes while others in a crowd, a brew of residents and tourists, reason tiny candles.

Earlier, dual distinguished South Carolina politicians — Senator Lindsey Graham and Representative Mark Sanford, a former administrator — paid their respects outward a church, that remained cordoned off by yellow military tape.

Mr. Graham pronounced that his niece had been a classmate of Mr. Roof’s years ago.

“I don’t know if he finished high school, though they went by facile propagandize together, or center school, and we consider partial of high school,” Mr. Graham said. “But we know, it’s got to blow we divided thinking” that a classmate is now indicted of murdering 9 people.

Many outward a church spoke gently and done few mentions of Mr. Roof. Instead, they focused on a 9 victims, who were identified on Thursday and enclosed a state senator, a high propagandize lane manager and a librarian.

Elsewhere in a region, people who helped to classify remembrances pronounced liberation would not be easy.

“Many people are struggling with this right now, and so we consider it’s a time to start a recovering process, only a tiny step,” Jimmy Huskey, a principal of Goose Creek High School, pronounced on Thursday before a burial for Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, 45, an worker of a propagandize who was killed in a attack.

Although both orderly and unpretentious expressions of grief have played out opposite a city given Wednesday night, Charleston was scheduled to reason a grave request burial on Friday dusk during an locus here.

The use was scheduled to take place hours after Mr. Roof’s initial justice coming in South Carolina in tie with a shooting. He waived extradition in North Carolina and was requisitioned into Charleston County’s jail shortly before 7:30 p.m. Thursday after arriving, in a striped uniform, in a procession of military vehicles.

A handful of onlookers assimilated a throng of reporters outward a jail, including Hikaym Rivers, a 15-year-old child who gripped a sign, a letters handwritten in black ink: “Your immorality doing did not mangle a community! You done us stronger!”

“We’re ancillary a community, and we’re holding a mount that no one can only take this divided from us,” he pronounced after Mr. Roof left into a county jail. “It’s a assent of mind.”

But in downtown Charleston, there was already speak of a long-term stress a sharpened competence stir.

“The doubt that we have is, is it going to occur again?” pronounced Jeremy Dye, a 35-year-old cab motorist and confidence ensure from North Charleston who pronounced he knew 3 people who were killed. “It’s always going to be fear. People in Charleston are going to have that fear now forever. It’s not going to rinse away. They’re going to be disturbed about, ‘O.K., when’s a subsequent church going to get hit?’ ”